Problem Set 1 Solution Key ECN 131
Problem Set 1 Solution Key ECN 131
Problem Set 1 Solution Key ECN 131
d) The change from BC2 to BC3 will NOT necessarily imply that someone will increase labor
supply. Consider someone who was choosing point d on BC2.
The new budget constraint BC3 represents a higher income level (BC3 is above BC2 around
point d), which tends to increase demand for leisure and market goods.
But BC3 is steeper than BC2, indicating a higher price of leisure (relative to market goods) and
thus the substitution effect tends to make Fifi choose less leisure – and more labor. So if the
substitution effect dominates the income effect, Fifi chooses more labor supply rather than less.
Leisure
b)
3
Wage
Income
Leisure
c)
Wage
Income
SE
IE
TE
Leisure
4
4. Consider the case of a single mother with two children, who is trying to decide how many hours to work
each month. Suppose, due to constraints such as child care, she is limited to working a maximum of 40
hours per week, for a total labor supply endowment of 160 hours per month. This mother has no other
source of labor income, and if she works, would receive a wage of $6 for each hour worked.
Assume that the mother’s utility function is defined over money (C) and leisure (L), and takes the
following form:
U = 3 log C + 5 log L
a) Solve for the mother’s optimal choice of labor supply. How much money does the mother have for
consumption?
a) L = leisure
C = 6(wage) × hours of work = 6(160–L) = 960–6L
U = 3 log C + 5 log L = 3 log(960–6L) + 5 logL